Home UAE Dubai Dubai real estate market may bottom out next year, S&P says A property glut and faltering demand in the Middle East’s business hub have driven prices down by more than a third since the market peaked some seven years ago by Bloomberg March 3, 2021 Property market in Dubai may ‘bottom out’ next year after weathering a tough 2020, according to S&P Global Ratings. “We already had a supply and demand imbalance in the market even before the pandemic, and after Covid-19 the situation just got worse,” S&P analyst Sapna Jagtiani told Bloomberg TV on Tuesday. Prices of residential and office spaces in the city are expected to ‘somewhere bottom out in 2022,’ she said. A property glut and faltering demand in the Middle East’s business hub have driven prices down by more than a third since the market peaked some seven years ago. The decline has been made worse by the coronavirus pandemic. Property broker JLL said in January that Dubai developers are likely to continue a high supply momentum this year, an increase that means two more years of price declines. The chief of Damac Properties, one of Dubai’s largest developers, said last month it will take at least one to two years for the real estate market to get out of its downturn. Dubai has suffered the steepest population shrinkage in the Gulf last year, while its gross domestic product contracted around 11 per cent, according to S&P estimates. More from Jagtiani: Expects supply to be low in residential segment this year Mortgage rates will likely remain low, which will encourage residents to buy property rather than rent High vaccination rates in the United Arab Emirates, of which Dubai is a part, are expected to help a return to office, possibly driving up prices in office spaces Dubai’s tourism activity is expected to be ‘very weak’ this year Tags Covid-19 Dubai Real Estate 0 Comments You might also like How REITs are unlocking the potential of UAE real estate RTA to construct 762 bus shelters in key Dubai areas by 2025 Dubai approves Dhs152m bonus for government employees Strong cash flows for UAE stocks in Christmas Day trade